Re: about connect the ISP

2001-01-02 Thread Mason Eike


  The address space you were assigned from the Mother ISP is more than
likely going to be out of a larger block the Mother ISP was assigned from
ARIN.  Say your /24 prefix (Class C) is part of a /16 (Class B) that they
own..  They only announce the /16 to their peers unless a specific situation
arises where they'd need to send the /24.  All of the Major ISP's and org's
follow this procedure and that's why we don't have 9,000,000 routes in our
routing tables.. :)..  Route aggregation is the term..
  So to answer your question.. :)..

 Mother ISP assigns /24 to you statically.  Then they redistribute that
throughout their Autonomous Systems using a Dynamic routing protocol so all
of the internal routers know the path to the router you're connect to, and
then only announce the /16 to their peers.   Everyone knows how to get to
everyone else..

Hope that answers your question.
Mas


"Tony van Ree" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Hi,

 We provide a service to thousands of clients with anything from full class
"B" to 4 addresses out of a class "C".  In a nutshell you place a default
static back to the supplier.  The supplier has a static pointing your class
"C" down your link.

 In a number of places this is managed by auto type processes for example
going into a customer area and adding the routes you own to your service.
The process then updates the router from the supplier to you.

 Teunis
 Hobart, Tasmania
 Australia


 On Saturday, December 30, 2000 at 07:49:57 AM, gary gary wrote:

  Hi guys:
  We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect
  the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C
  address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP
  locate the Class c networking , just using static
  routing? Need they redistribute the static to their
  dynamic routing (for example OSPF) in order to the
  internet router know the class c network,?
  Did the mother ISP create the stub area, then assign
  the lots of ip address to stub area ,if so  how to
  create the stub area by static routing? Anyone can
  give me some configuration,
 
 
  Thanks in advice
 
 
 
  gary
 
 
 
 
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Re: about connect the ISP

2001-01-02 Thread Mr.K.RAMESH BABU

Having static route for ur network in their(mother isp) router
and redistributing static in to their dynamic routing protocol(like ospf)
is one option ...

Rameshbabu 



On Sat, 30 Dec 2000, gary gary wrote:

 Hi guys:
 We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect
 the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C
 address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP
 locate the Class c networking , just using static
 routing? Need they redistribute the static to their
 dynamic routing (for example OSPF) in order to the
 internet router know the class c network,?
 Did the mother ISP create the stub area, then assign
 the lots of ip address to stub area ,if so  how to
 create the stub area by static routing? Anyone can
 give me some configuration,
 
 
 Thanks in advice
 
 
   
 gary
 
 
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Re: about connect the ISP

2000-12-31 Thread Tony van Ree

Hi,

We provide a service to thousands of clients with anything from full class "B" to 4 
addresses out of a class "C".  In a nutshell you place a default static back to the 
supplier.  The supplier has a static pointing your class "C" down your link.

In a number of places this is managed by auto type processes for example going into a 
customer area and adding the routes you own to your service.  The process then updates 
the router from the supplier to you.

Teunis
Hobart, Tasmania
Australia


On Saturday, December 30, 2000 at 07:49:57 AM, gary gary wrote:

 Hi guys:
 We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect
 the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C
 address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP
 locate the Class c networking , just using static
 routing? Need they redistribute the static to their
 dynamic routing (for example OSPF) in order to the
 internet router know the class c network,?
 Did the mother ISP create the stub area, then assign
 the lots of ip address to stub area ,if so  how to
 create the stub area by static routing? Anyone can
 give me some configuration,
 
 
 Thanks in advice
 
 
 
 gary
 
 
 
 
 __
 Do You Yahoo!?
 Yahoo! Photos - Share your holiday photos online!
 http://photos.yahoo.com/
 
 _
 FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
 Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 


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about connect the ISP

2000-12-30 Thread gary gary

Hi guys:
We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect
the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C
address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP
locate the Class c networking , just using static
routing? Need they redistribute the static to their
dynamic routing (for example OSPF) in order to the
internet router know the class c network,?
Did the mother ISP create the stub area, then assign
the lots of ip address to stub area ,if so  how to
create the stub area by static routing? Anyone can
give me some configuration,


Thanks in advice


  
gary


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about connect the ISP

2000-12-30 Thread gary gary

Hi guys:
We are a small ISP, just using static routing connect
the mother ISP, the mother ISP assign a class C
address to us, I want to know how the mother ISP
locate the Class c networking , just using static
routing? Need they redistribute the static to their
dynamic routing (for example OSPF) in order to the
internet router know the class c network,?
Did the mother ISP create the stub area, then assign
the lots of ip address to stub area ,if so  how to
create the stub area by static routing? Anyone can
give me some configuration,


Thanks in advice



gary




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